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Here is something from Brad Warner, who is a Soto Zen teacher. However there are a number of Zen schools, and I'm not sure how representative this view is.

"The Myth of Rebirth

A guy named James wrote to me and asked:
“Could you explain rebirth to me like I’m five. I’ve never been able to grasp a knowledge of this.”
I answered him thusly; Rebirth is a myth that some Buddhists believe in. It might be loosely based on fact. But it might just be a fantasy.
I used the word myth to define the Buddhist idea of rebirth. These days a lot of people use the word myth as a synonym for falsehood. But that’s not the proper meaning of the word. A myth is a way of explaining something for which there is no good literal explanation. A myth is not necessarily false. But it doesn’t have to accord with fact.
A myth is not untrue because it fails to accord with fact. It can be true but not in the way scientific explanations or histories are true. A myth can be true without being factual.
But it’s important that we don’t believe in our myths in the same way we believe in science and history."

However, in my brief dalliance in to the Zen world, it wasn't really mentioned?

Where do the Zen folk stand on rebirth?

I concentrate on my meditation practise and the 8 fold path and the practical elements of buddhist practise. Personally I dont dwell much on whether rebirth happens or not, just as I also dont dwell on existence or not of god/s.
My personal experience is that it is impossible to know these things therefore huge time spent on contemplating them is futile...this is just my humble take on it. I fully repect peoples belief in rebirth and the existence of god/s. For me following the path is the only real truth.

@misecmisc1 said:@Bunks: Do u planz to move to Japan for Zen , wait wait hold on there till I reach, we will have a coffee together and then we will talk about - no, no not Zen, but how iz the climate coming along .

Getting cooler mate! Generally down to about 6 or 7 Celsius overnight and about 15 / 16 during the day.

Traditional style zen has a traditional view of rebirth. It just isn't emphasized much mostly because zen teaching isn't interested in a good rebirth, but with seeing your true nature and becoming a Buddha.

this lead me speculate my true nature,possibly a horn dog and a hound dog.but on point to the topic , rebirth.hmm i i do know and dont know.thats dual ,not zen.ahh the middle way view,yes,yes.elaborate. yes we we are reborn regenerative phase,an aspect of rebirth to counteract the rate of change that our body goes through.and yes the dissolution of the body,after death,blind alley,dont know.which lead to the zen point,imo,live now.

You might find this of interest @Bunks.... Alan Watts on "Rebirth" (however he uses the term reincarnation) It goes for around 15 minutes , if you don't want to listen to all, then start at 10 minutes into the video....

You might find this of interest @Bunks.... Alan Watts on "Rebirth" (however he uses the term reincarnation) It goes for around 15 minutes , if you don't want to listen to all, then start at 10 minutes into the video....

Thanks @Shoshin - I love it when he says "Just as the flame is the conversion of wax into gas, so you and I are the conversion of air, and water, and light, and beef steak, and milk into.......shit"

@Hozan said:.
My personal experience is that it is impossible to know these things therefore huge time spent on contemplating them is futile...this is just my humble take on it. I fully repect peoples belief in rebirth and the existence of god/s. For me following the path is the only real truth.

However, in my brief dalliance in to the Zen world, it wasn't really mentioned?

Where do the Zen folk stand on rebirth?

I concentrate on my meditation practise and the 8 fold path and the practical elements of buddhist practise. Personally I dont dwell much on whether rebirth happens or not, just as I also dont dwell on existence or not of god/s.
My personal experience is that it is impossible to know these things therefore huge time spent on contemplating them is futile...this is just my humble take on it. I fully repect peoples belief in rebirth and the existence of god/s. For me following the path is the only real truth.

However, in my brief dalliance in to the Zen world, it wasn't really mentioned?

Where do the Zen folk stand on rebirth?

I concentrate on my meditation practise and the 8 fold path and the practical elements of buddhist practise. Personally I dont dwell much on whether rebirth happens or not, just as I also dont dwell on existence or not of god/s.
My personal experience is that it is impossible to know these things therefore huge time spent on contemplating them is futile...this is just my humble take on it. I fully repect peoples belief in rebirth and the existence of god/s. For me following the path is the only real truth.

This idea has become fashionable, but as far as I know there isn't any support for it in the suttas or sutras.

And what exactly is "reborn" moment to moment? You could say habit or tendencies, but that doesn't really make sense because by definition those things persist in the background and don't need to be "reborn".

Trying to impose a contemporary view onto a traditional teaching usually means trying to bang square pegs into round holes, it's messy, misleading and confusing, and often more trouble than it's worth, IMO. Also people can get caught up in a cycle of belief and disbelief, craving and aversion to ideas. I think it is better to just put such questions to one side.

@Will_Baker said:And what exactly is "reborn" moment to moment?
-If you have a favorite spot you frequent, are you the same person each time you do?

I can observe that my state of mind is continually changing, but I don't see what that has to do with "rebirth".

-For sure your state of mind will be different, but some would argue it goes deeper than that. For example, due to the passage of time your body won't be the same body from visit to visit, nor will the place be exactly the same. Nor will the context of each moment be the same as the next moment. This is due to the complex interplay of public vs. private within which we navigate each separate and distinct moment. I have heard it said: "we are reborn moment to moment," and it seems to me this is related to the above...

@Will_Baker said:And what exactly is "reborn" moment to moment?
-If you have a favorite spot you frequent, are you the same person each time you do?

I can observe that my state of mind is continually changing, but I don't see what that has to do with "rebirth".

-For sure your state of mind will be different, but some would argue it goes deeper than that. For example, due to the passage of time your body won't be the same body from visit to visit, nor will the place be exactly the same. Nor will the context of each moment be the same as the next moment. This is due to the complex interplay of public vs. private within which we navigate each separate and distinct moment. I have heard it said: "we are reborn moment to moment," and it seems to me this is related to the above...

Sure, you could say we are a process rather than an entity, which is one way of talking about anatta and sunyata. But if we are just a process then there is nothing to be "reborn", so talking about moment-to-moment "rebirth" doesn't make any sense.

I think you could talk more sensibly about day-to-day rebirth. Like when you wake up from a deep sleep, and for a short period you're not sure who or where you are, then you remember these things, and "you" are reborn, so to speak.

@Will_Baker said:And what exactly is "reborn" moment to moment?
-If you have a favorite spot you frequent, are you the same person each time you do?

I can observe that my state of mind is continually changing, but I don't see what that has to do with "rebirth".

-For sure your state of mind will be different, but some would argue it goes deeper than that. For example, due to the passage of time your body won't be the same body from visit to visit, nor will the place be exactly the same. Nor will the context of each moment be the same as the next moment. This is due to the complex interplay of public vs. private within which we navigate each separate and distinct moment. I have heard it said: "we are reborn moment to moment," and it seems to me this is related to the above...

Sure, you could say we are a process rather than an entity, which is one way of talking about anatta and sunyata. But if we are just a process then there is nothing to be "reborn", so talking about moment-to-moment "rebirth" doesn't make any sense.

I think you could talk more sensibly about day-to-day rebirth. Like when you wake up from a deep sleep, and for a short period you're not sure who or where you are, then you remember these things, and "you" are reborn, so to speak.

-Many believe we are process and entity; I don't see this as being mutually exclusive. I take your point on day to day rebirth, but in the context of this thread, I was speaking to the notion of "moment to moment rebirth." When I wrote above that many zennies don't emphasize rebirth all that much, I wasn't arguing they don't acknowledge the possibility at all...

Rebirth is definitely in the classical Zen texts. In my school there is some reading during every retreat and the stuff is regularly mentioned.

However, we take it more as a metaphora for what our mind does during this very life-- that is, its propensity to recreate the same states and situations over and over again. Buddhist teaching on rebirth seems to describe quite well our cyclical ups and downs, their quality, their root and the way to move beyond them.

I don't think I know a single person who strongly believes in literal/physical rebirth. At most, I hear the "who knows what happens after we die" approach.

I don't think I know a single person who strongly believes in literal/physical rebirth. At most, I hear the "who knows what happens after we die" approach...@shadowleaver, as regards zennies, with the exception of one fellow I know, who is also a dear friend, that has been my experience as well.

@shadowleaver said:> I don't think I know a single person who strongly believes in literal/physical rebirth.

Sure, a lot of western Buddhists don't, hence the desire to replace it with a moment-to-moment interpretation. However the fact that it has become a popular idea doesn't mean it is valid, sensible or supported by Buddhist texts. Or even particularly useful.

@shadowleaver said:
I don't think I know a single person who strongly believes in literal/physical rebirth. At most, I hear the "who knows what happens after we die" approach.

I believe that there is an afterlife, and that there is a kind of recycling of the mind and self. Nature and the universe are not wasteful, you see it everywhere, even the lifecycle of a leaf... it drops from the tree, falls to the ground, decomposes and becomes hummus, and feeds future trees and maybe those atoms become a leaf again someday.

On a larger scale, hydrogen is fused in stars and in novae heavier elements are produced, which go on to become planets and living things. The life of an atom may have started as a collection of quarks just after the Big Bang, and continued to become heavier and more complex, be part of first this molecule than that. It is not wasted, part of the lifecycle of stars and planets.

@Kerome said:> I believe that there is an afterlife, and that there is a kind of recycling of the mind and self.

It's interesting to ponder whether consciousness is in some sense recycled, or in some sense integral to the universe.

( gawd, I'm sounding like Chopra now! )

Well scientists have determined that there are something like 11 dimensions to existence. We can only see a few of these, it would not surprise me if consciousness was in there on a separate dimensional axis.

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federicaseeker of the clear blue skyIts better to remain silent and be thought a fool, than to speak out and remove all doubtModerator

@Kerome said:> I believe that there is an afterlife, and that there is a kind of recycling of the mind and self.

It's interesting to ponder whether consciousness is in some sense recycled, or in some sense integral to the universe.

( gawd, I'm sounding like Chopra now! )

Well scientists have determined that there are something like 11 dimensions to existence. We can only see a few of these, it would not surprise me if consciousness was in there on a separate dimensional axis.

Could you give us a link/reference to such a determination? I'd be interested to read up on that. As long as for the better part, it is '11 Dimensions to Existence for Idiots', that is....

@Kerome said:> I believe that there is an afterlife, and that there is a kind of recycling of the mind and self.

It's interesting to ponder whether consciousness is in some sense recycled, or in some sense integral to the universe.

( gawd, I'm sounding like Chopra now! )

Well scientists have determined that there are something like 11 dimensions to existence. We can only see a few of these, it would not surprise me if consciousness was in there on a separate dimensional axis.

I don't know of any science pointing to consciousness as a dimension ( though there is quite a lot of pseudoscience in this area! ). I think science generally regards consciousness as an emergent property of biological organisms.

It's all related to M-theory, which is part of the superstrings idea which came around in the 1990's. It's of course still theoretical, they haven't exactly proved that this is the case, or justified it in terms of quantum mechanics, so saying they have "determined" it was a bit of a leap.